Author

admin

Browsing

U.S. President Donald Trump met face-to-face with Chinese leader Xi Jinping on Thursday, the final day of Trump’s trip to Asia that included stops in Malaysia, Japan and South Korea, in an attempt to resolve the ongoing trade disputes between the two sides.

Trump has imposed substantial tariffs on China since returning to the White House in January, and Beijing retaliated with limits on exports of rare earth elements. Both sides want to avoid the risk of blowing up the world economy, which would harm their own countries.

The leaders of the world’s two largest economies spoke to the press in brief introductory remarks before meeting behind closed doors along with their top officials.

Xi said in his opening remarks that ‘it feels very warm seeing you again because it’s been many years.’

‘We do not always see eye to eye with each other,’ Xi said, noting that ‘it is normal for the two leading economies of the world to have frictions now and then.’

The Chinese leader added that the two countries ‘are fully able to help each other succeed and prosper together.’

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Vice President JD Vance spoke at length during a large Turning Point USA gathering at the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss) in honor of Charlie Kirk, during which he shared the slain conservative activist’s impact on his faith and told students that ‘a properly rooted Christian moral order’ is key to the future of the country.

After the audience heard from Kirk’s widow, Erika, Vance took the stage and spoke for a brief time before taking questions from the audience on a range of issues from immigration to National Guard deployments and the Second Amendment. But several of the questions revolved around Vance’s faith and the impact it has had on how he governs as Vice President. Some asked about his views on religious liberty while another questioned how he was raising his family in a dual-religion household where his wife is Hindu.   

‘I make no apologies for thinking that Christian values are an important foundation of this country,’ Vance said when responding to a question about the separation of church and state. ‘Anybody who’s telling you their view is neutral likely has an agenda to sell you. And I’m at least honest about the fact that I think the Christian foundation of this country is a good thing.’

Meanwhile, Vance railed against contemporary liberalism in his comments about faith Wednesday night, calling it a ‘perverted version of Christianity.’  

‘There’s nothing wrong, of course, with focusing on people who are disenfranchised, for example. That’s the focus of liberalism. But if you completely separate it from any religious duty or any civic virtue, then that can actually become, for example, an inducement to lawlessness,’ Vance said while responding to a questioner. ‘You can’t just have compassion for the criminal. You also have to have justice too. Which is why I think that a properly rooted Christian moral order is such an important part of the future of our country.’

Vance went on to say that he does not think God must be kicked out of the public square, adding he did not believe that is what the founders intended. 

‘Anybody who tells you it’s required by the Constitution is lying to you,’ Vance argued. ‘What happened, is, the Supreme Court interpreted ‘Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion’ to effectively throw the church out of every public place at the federal, state and local level. I think it was a terrible mistake, and we’re still paying for the consequences of it today.’

In addition to taking tough policy-oriented questions about faith and religion, Vance was also asked at one point about living in an interfaith household. Vance’s wife is Hindu. 

Vance noted how when the pair met he was not a Christian, but over time he and his wife, Usha, decided to raise their boys Christian. Vance said open communication and respect for each other’s beliefs played a part in his marriage and his family’s decision to raise their kids Christian.   

‘Most Sundays she will come with me to church. As I’ve told her, and I’ve said publicly, and I’ll say now in front of 10,000 of my closest friends, ‘Do I hope eventually that she is somehow moved by the same thing that I was moved in by church? Yeah, I honestly, I do wish that.’ Because I believe in the Christian gospel and I hope eventually my wife comes to see it the same way. But if she doesn’t, then God says everybody has free will, and so that doesn’t cause a problem for me.’

Vance also spoke about the impact Kirk has had on his faith during the Wednesday night event honoring the slain activist. Vance said that, at least in part, Kirk moved him to be more vocal about his faith.

‘This is another way in which Charlie has affected my life – I would say that I grew up again in a generation where even if people had very deep personal faith, they didn’t talk about their faith a whole lot,’ Vance told the crowd while remembering his late friend. 

‘But the reason why I try to be the best husband I can be, the best father I can be, the reason why I care so much about all the issues that we’re going to talk about, is because I believe I’ve been placed in this position for a brief period of time to do the most amount of good for God and for the country that I love so much. And that’s the most important way that my faith influences me.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

No. 19 Texas will aim to earn a signature victory and keep its College Football Playoff dreams alive when it hosts Diego Pavia and No. 11 Vanderbilt on Saturday.

Whether the Longhorns will do so without their most famous player remains to be seen.

Texas quarterback Arch Manning is questionable to play in the Longhorns’ matchup against the Commodores in Week 10, according to the SEC athlete availability report released on Wednesday, Oct. 29.

The star sophomore remains in concussion protocol after suffering a head injury in the overtime period of his team’s come-from-behind 45-38 win Oct. 25 at Mississippi State. Manning was hurt on a 13-yard scramble that put Texas in position for what would ultimately be the game-winning touchdown pass from Manning’s backup, Matthew Caldwell.

Longhorns coach Steve Sarkisian told reporters on Monday, Oct. 27 that he would receive an update on Manning’s playing status later in the week.

The No. 1 overall recruit in the 2023 class — and, perhaps more notably, the nephew of former NFL stars Peyton and Eli Manning — has struggled in his first season as a starter, completing 60.9% of his passes for 1,795 yards, 15 touchdowns and six interceptions, along with 199 rushing yards and six scores.

He put together arguably the best game of his college career last week, though, throwing for 346 yards, three touchdowns and an interception to help Texas overcome a 17-point fourth-quarter deficit on the road against Mississippi State to force overtime.

Manning is one of four Longhorns listed as questionable on the availability report, a group that also includes All-American safety Michael Taaffe, starting offensive lineman Cole Hutson and freshman edge rusher Lance Jackson.

In the event Manning can’t play, Texas will turn to Caldwell, a graduate transfer who started last season at Troy, where he completed 63.2% of his passes for 1,608 yards, 13 touchdowns and eight interceptions.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Less than a week ago, the San Francisco Giants made history by signing Tennessee manager Tony Vitello to a three-year contract. Just a few days later, the Baltimore Orioles brought Cleveland Guardians associate manager Craig Albernaz on board to be their new skipper.

Wednesday, the Minnesota Twins reportedly made their managerial choice for 2026, becoming the fifth team to already do so this offseason. They’re going with former Pittsburgh Pirates manager Derek Shelton, according to multiple reports.

Before operating in Pittsburgh’s dugout, Shelton was Minnesota’s bench coach. His familiarity with the Twin Cities could make him a vital asset for a team that underperformed in 2025, leading to a massive fire sale at the most recent trade deadline.

Here’s everything to know about the Twins’ newest manager.

Derek Shelton’s managerial record

Shelton became manager of the Pirates in 2019 after a team-wide reset. He did manage to increase the team’s win percentage each of his first four seasons with the club, culminating in a 76-86 record in 2023.

Unfortunately, the Pirates mirrored that record in 2024 and then got off to an atrocious start in 2025, going just 12-26 (.316) with Shelton at the helm before he was let go. The Pirates finished the season with a 71-91 (.438) record.

Derek Shelton before Pittsburgh

Shelton started his professional coaching career as the minor league hitting coordinator in Cleveland in 2003. He moved to the Rays following the 2009 season as the hitting coach. He was fired following the 2016 season but was hired soon after to be a quality control coach for Toronto. In 2017, he joined the Twins as their bench coach.

What other teams still need a manager?

Although several teams have already named a new manager, the San Diego Padres, Atlanta Braves, Colorado Rockies, and Washington Nationals are all still looking for new managers.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

LOS ANGELES – Three pitches, two home runs and World Series history made by the Toronto Blue Jays in a stunning start to a pivotal Game 5.

Leadoff man du jour Davis Schneider hit Blake Snell’s first pitch into the left field pavilion at Dodger Stadium, and before he could snugly don Toronto’s iconic home run jacket, franchise player Vladimir Guerrero Jr. followed with a 394-foot shot in the same neighborhood. Toronto 2, Los Angeles 0 before Snell could even settle in. 

It was the first time in World Series history that a team led off a game with back-to-back home runs. And for Guerrero, it was second in as many nights and eighth of the postseason.

Snell, the two-time Cy Young Award winner who posted a 0.86 ERA with just six hits given up in three playoff wins entering the World Series, opted to throw three fastballs out of the gate, and was punished for it. 

Toronto kept up an aggressive approach that worked against Shohei Ohtani the night before, ambushing Snell with the two homers and three hits in their first four plate appearances. 

The Blue Jays already pinned a loss on Snell in this World Series. He took a 2-2 tie into the bottom of the sixth in Game 1, but did not record an out and the Blue Jays went on to score nine runs in the inning en route to an 11-4 victory. 

This time, they brought the pain from the jump. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Follow along for live updates from Game 5 of the World Series.

Los Angeles Lakers legend Magic Johnson threw out the ceremonial first pitch before Game 5 of the 2025 World Series at Dodger Stadium on Wednesday, Oct. 29.The Los Angeles Dodgers and Toronto Blue Jays are tied 2-2 in the best-of-seven series.Johnson is a minority owner of the Dodgers as part of the Guggenheim Baseball Management ownership group.The group purchased the team in 2012.

Earlier in the day, Johnson had posted on social media about the importance of Game 5.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast.Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

As President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping prepare to meet Thursday, one soft-spoken U.S. export star will take center stage: soybeans. 

The humble crop, a $30 billion pillar of U.S. agriculture exports, has become a powerful symbol of the economic interdependence and political tension between Washington and Beijing. 

In short, soybeans have come to embody the volatility of the U.S.–China trade war. Beijing halted purchases of American soybeans in response to Trump’s earlier tariffs on Chinese goods. 

China pivoted to suppliers in Brazil and Argentina, a move that underscored how quickly global trade patterns can shift and how vulnerable U.S. farmers are to diplomatic rifts between Washington and Beijing.

What began as tit-for-tat posturing between the world’s two largest economies has turned into a symbolic and economic gut punch for Trump’s rural base, whose livelihoods depend on the very trade ties now caught in the crossfire.

According to the American Soybean Association, the U.S. has traditionally served as China’s leading soybean source. Prior to the 2018 trade conflict, roughly 28% of U.S. soybean production was exported to China. Those crop exports fell sharply to 11% in 2018 and 2019, recovered to 31% by 2021 amid pandemic-era demand and eased back to 22% in 2024.

But some policy experts argue that China’s shift away from U.S. soybeans was already underway.

‘China was always going to reduce its reliance on the United States for food security,’ Bryan Burack, a senior policy advisor for China and the Indo-Pacific at the Heritage Foundation told Fox News Digital. ‘China started signing purchase agreements with other countries for soybeans well before President Trump took office.’ 

He added that Beijing has ‘been decoupling from the U.S. for a long time.’

‘Unfortunately, the only way for us to respond is to do the same, and that process is painful and excruciating,’ Burack said.

But for farmers thousands of miles from Washington and Beijing, those policy shifts translate into shrinking markets and tighter margins.

‘We rely on trade with other countries, specifically China, to buy our soybeans,’ Brad Arnold, a multigenerational soybean farmer in southwestern Missouri, told FOX Business. He said China’s decision to boycott U.S. soybean purchases ‘has huge impacts on our business and our bottom line.’

‘There are domestic uses for soybeans, looking at renewable diesel, biodiesel specifically produced from soybeans,’ Arnold said. ‘In the grand scheme of things, that’s such a small percentage currently, you know it’s going to take a customer like China to buy beans to make a noticeable impact. You can’t take our No. 1 customer, shut them off and just overnight find a replacement.’

That reliance on China adds new weight to the diplomatic stage this week as Trump and Xi prepare to meet in South Korea. The two leaders will meet on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Summit in Busan, South Korea, marking their first in-person talks since Trump’s return to office. 

Ahead of the meeting, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said he expected China to delay rare earth restrictions and resume U.S. soybean purchases, calling it part of a ‘substantial framework’ both sides aim to maintain. Bessent also said that trade negotiations were moving toward averting a fresh 100% U.S. tariff on Chinese goods.

And in a possible gesture of easing tensions, Reuters reported that China bought around 180,000 metric tons of U.S. soybeans in the run-up to Trump and Xi’s meeting.

Whether it marks a true thaw in U.S.–China trade relations or just a temporary reprieve, the purchase underscores how deeply intertwined diplomacy and agriculture remain.

Fox Business’ Eric Revell contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

NEW YORK — The countdown to the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan Cortina, Italy, hit the 100-day mark on Oct. 29. That leaves spectators ample time to study up on the U.S. Olympic team with no need to sweat.

The athletes, on the other hand …

“It’s pretty crazy,’ said Kristen Santos-Griswold, the American speed skater, when asked what the feeling is when she hears there are 100 days to go. “It’s so funny, because after the last Games, I was, like, ‘Four years is so long.’ When I was deciding if I wanted to keep skating or not, I was like, ‘I don’t know if I can handle another four years.’ But now I’m like, ‘Oh my gosh, there’s no time.”

Santos-Griswold was among more than 100 U.S. Olympic and Paraylmpic athletes at the Team USA Media Summit this week, discussing preparations, expectations and more ahead of the Games starting in early February. The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic teams will include more than 250 athletes, and 14 have secured spots already. Among those breathing easy: Snowboarding stars Chloe Kim and Red Gerard, both of whom have qualified.

The rest are headed into the heart of the qualification process, with final rosters to be set in mid-January.

“The anticipation is building, the training intensifies, as you can imagine,’ said Sarah Hirshland, CEO of the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee.  “But the excitement is also building and we are very, very encouraged by what Team USA promises to be by the time we get to Milan Cortina.’

Here’s where Team USA stands entering this final stretch. The Opening Ceremony is set for Feb. 6.

Lindsey Vonn chases her Olympics return

At 41, Lindsey Vonn, the legendary Alpine skier, is trying to make her fifth U.S. Olympic team, and planning to compete in the downhill, super-G and team combined races. It’s understandable if this comes as a surprise.

In early 2019, Vonn announced her retirement. But in late 2024, she announced her comeback — after undergoing surgery for a partial knee replacement, no less.

‘Because of my knee replacement, I literally can do anything I want to do. I’m not restricted,’ Vonn said Tuesday. ‘Since I blew out my knee the first time in 2013, I haven’t been able to train with no restrictions. So I think I’m in potentially the best shape of my life, which is saying something at my age.’

She seems to relish being almost twice as old as some of her prospective teammates, who clearly are more adept in some areas than she is. Like creating TikTok videos.

“I did one,’ Vonn said. “It’s my first and probably only TikTok video because it was ‘Law & Order (SVU).’ ”

Her comeback gained steam in March 2025. That’s when at 40 she became the oldest Alpine skier to make a World Cup podium with a second place finish in the super-G at the 2025 World Cup Finals in Sun Valley, Idaho.

It muffled the skeptics and fueled believers.

“I’ve gotten so much support from so many people, so many young girls and women,’ Vonn said. “I think I’m proving to the world that a woman at 41 can do anything they set their mind to.’

Who are Team USA’s big stars to watch?

She earned her first gold at the 2014 Sochi Games in the women’s slalom event. She collected her second gold at the 2018 PyeongChang Games, this one in giant slalom, and won a silver in super combined. Then, almost shockingly, she left the 2022 Beijing Games without a medal. Don’t expect it to happen again.

Chloe Kim, the snowboarder, was the darling of the 2018 Winter Olympics when at age 17 she won gold in the halfpipe. It was no fluke. In 2022, she won gold in the halfpipe again. Now, at the advanced age of 25, she is coming off a gold-medal performance at the 2025 World Championships and poised to win, yep, more Olympic gold.

NHL players, including Jack Eichel, Auston Matthews and Charlie McAvoy, will be on the Olympic ice for the first time in 12 years. And hockey star Hilary Knight will bring her own star power to the ice. She’ll compete in her fifth Winter Games. The 36-year-old forward led the Americans to a gold and three silvers during her four Olympic appearances.

Who are Team USA’s other stars to watch?

In 2022, speed skater Erin Jackson became the first Black woman to win individual gold at the Winter Olympics when she won the 500 meters. Oh, and that was with only four months of competition as speed skater. Expect more medals on the ice for the former inline skater who also has competed in roller derby.

At 40, Kaillie Humphries is one of the world’s older bobsledders — and best, with her three Olympic golds and one bronze. The 41-year-old Elana Meyers Taylor is another medal contender, having won three Olympic silvers and two bronze in her four Olympic appearances.

Illia Malinin, 20, is known in figure skating as the Quadgod, and he earned that nickname the fearless way. He is the world’s only figure skater to land a quad axel in competition. That’s four rotations in mid-air, followed by a clean landing. This would be his first Olympics, and it’s easy to imagine him spinning his way to a medal.

Jordan Stolz, 21, is the world’s fastest skater at 1,000 meters and at one point built an 18-victory streak at World Cup events. He’s racked up gold medals at the World Championships, and now it’s time for the 21-year-old to bag an Olympic medal at his second Games.

Winter Olympics sliding center update

The rebuilding of Cortina Sliding Centre is complete, and so waits the 16-curve, 1,892-yard track on which the luge, skeleton and bobsled will be held. The venue passed safety tests earlier this year, and it passed the aesthetics test decades ago. The venue offers breathtaking views of the Italian Alps and rich Olympic history, having hosted bobsledding for the 1966 Winter Olympics.

American Mystique Ro, who will compete in the skeleton mixed team event that’s making its Olympic debut, could make it onto the podium, and she expressed no concerns about safety.

“This is definitely a technical slider’s track from what we understand of it,’ said Ro, who won a gold and silver at World Championships earlier this year. “So from there we can kind of ease up a little bit on our apprehension. But obviously we want to make sure we understand where the pressure is to identify it.’

To ensure she’s ready for Olympic competition, Ro said she’ll scout out the track early and game plan.

“We want to make sure we understand where the tricky parts,’ she said.

When are 2026 Olympic trials for figure skating?

Qualifying for most Winter Olympic sports is points-based, dependant on how athletes finish in World Cup events over the coming weeks. Figure skating, like gymnastics for Summer Games, does have trials in the form of the U.S. Figure Skating Championships. So does curling. Here are those key dates.

Nov. 11-16, 2025: Curling Olympic Team Trials in Sioux Falls, South Dakota

Jan. 4-11, 2026: U.S. Figure Skating Championships in St. Louis

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

It hasn’t even been a week since the arrests of former Portland Trail Blazers head coach Chauncey Billups and Miami Heat guard Terry Rozier on federal gambling-related charges. Yet somehow, the news keeps getting worse for the pair.

Neither Billups nor Rozier will receive any of their NBA salaries while they are on leave during the FBI’s ongoing investigation, a person with direct knowledge of the situation confirmed to USA TODAY Sports on Wednesday, Oct. 29.

The person spoke under the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to comment publicly on the matter.

Rozier’s salary will be held in escrow. If he is eventually cleared in the federal investigation, he will receive all missed payments in full, while Billups’ leave will be unpaid.

This decision has sparked outrage from the NBA Players’ Association, while the attorneys for both Billups and Rozier have denied any involvement with the gambling operations being investigated.

Will this affect NBA team spending/salary caps?

It will not.

Although Rozier will no longer receive installments of his $26.6 million salary, the first of which Rozier was set to receive later this week, the Heat will not receive any sort of salary cap benefits as a result.

Billups, meanwhile, will simply be on unpaid leave. He signed a multi-year extension in April this year.

The NBA Players’ Association is concerned with the NBA’s decision to withhold Rozier’s salary. The union released a statement announcing it would be filing a grievance on Rozier’s behalf:

‘While we are in agreement with the league that upholding the integrity of the game is of the utmost importance, their decision to place Terry [Rozier] on leave without pay is counter to the presumption of innocence and inconsistent with the terms of our Collective Bargaining Agreement.’

The statement continued, ‘We plan to challenge their decision via the proper channels.’

Will Terry Rozier get his money back?

Should Rozier be cleared of the charges he is facing and reinstated into the NBA, he could receive all of his missed payments back in full.

Whether he gets any of the money will hinge on the results of his legal case.

Rozier is not only facing charges regarding the illegal gambling operations being investigated by the FBI, but according to ESPN, he is also facing an $8,218,211 federal income tax lien filed in November 2023.

Rozier’s attorney, Jim Trusty, says Rozier does not owe that money.

Trusty told ESPN on Wednesday, ‘He owed $9,000 of the total $8 million in taxes from 2021, and it has been paid. We just need the IRS to help remove the now-defunct lien. … Terry never owed anyone $8 million.’

ESPN writes that Trusty was unable to answer follow-up questions on the matter.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

As President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping prepare to meet Thursday, one soft-spoken U.S. export star will take center stage: soybeans. The humble crop, a $30 billion pillar of U.S. agriculture exports, has become a powerful symbol of the economic interdependence and political tension between Washington and Beijing. 

In short, soybeans have come to embody the volatility of the U.S.–China trade war. Beijing halted purchases of American soybeans on the heels of retaliatory tariffs on the crop, responding to Trump’s earlier duties on Chinese goods. 

China pivoted to suppliers in Brazil and Argentina, a move that underscored how quickly global trade patterns can shift and how vulnerable U.S. farmers are to diplomatic rifts between Washington and Beijing.

What began as tit-for-tat posturing between the world’s two largest economies has turned into a symbolic and economic gut punch for Trump’s rural base, whose livelihoods depend on the very trade ties now caught in the crossfire.

According to the American Soybean Association, the U.S. has traditionally served as China’s leading soybean source. Prior to the 2018 trade conflict, roughly 28% of U.S. soybean production was exported to China. Those crop exports fell sharply to 11% in 2018 and 2019, recovered to 31% by 2021 amid pandemic-era demand and eased back to 22% in 2024.

But some policy experts argue that China’s shift away from U.S. soybeans was already underway.

‘China was always going to reduce its reliance on the United States for food security,’ Bryan Burack, a senior policy advisor for China and the Indo-Pacific at the Heritage Foundation told Fox News Digital. ‘China started signing purchase agreements with other countries for soybeans well before President Trump took office,’ he said, adding that Beijing has ‘been decoupling from the U.S. for a long time.’

‘Unfortunately, the only way for us to respond is to do the same and that process is painful and excruciating,’ Burack said.

But for farmers thousands of miles from Washington and Beijing, those policy shifts translate into shrinking markets and tighter margins.

‘We rely on trade with other countries, specifically China, to buy our soybeans,’ Brad Arnold, a multigenerational soybean farmer in southwestern Missouri, told FOX Business. He said that China’s decision to boycott U.S. soybean purchases ‘has huge impacts on our business and our bottom line.’

‘There are domestic uses for soybeans, looking at renewable diesel, biodiesel specifically produced from soybeans,’ Arnold said. ‘In the grand scheme of things, that’s such a small percentage currently, you know it’s going to take a customer like China to buy beans to make a noticeable impact. You can’t take our number one customer, shut them off and just overnight find a replacement.’

That reliance on China adds new weight to the diplomatic stage this week, as Trump and Xi prepare to meet in South Korea. The two leaders will meet on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Summit in Busan, South Korea, marking their first in-person talks since Trump’s return to office. 

Ahead of the meeting, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said he expected China to delay rare earth restrictions and resume U.S. soybean purchases, calling it part of a ‘substantial framework’ both sides aim to maintain. Bessent also said that trade negotiations were moving toward averting a fresh 100% U.S. tariff on Chinese goods.

And in a possible gesture of easing tensions, Reuters reported that China bought around 180,000 metric tons of U.S. soybeans in the run-up to Trump and Xi’s meeting.

Whether it marks a true thaw in U.S.–China trade relations or just a temporary reprieve, the purchase underscores how deeply intertwined diplomacy and agriculture remain.

Fox Business’ Eric Revell contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS